Tyana – Ruins of a City near Nigde in Cappadocia
- Written by Portal Editor
Anyone who walks through Niğde Museum of Art History with open eyes will certainly come across the name Tyana several times, an ancient metropolis that has so far been little known from a tourist point of view.
Today's Kemerhisar emerged from Tyana south of Niğde, so another interesting destination on the way to visit Cappadocia.
Tyana probably corresponds to the Hittite Tuwanuwa that appears in the list of conquests of the early King Labarna I. In Assyrian sources it is called Tuhana. The main god of the city of Tuwanuwa was the weather god, whose name has unfortunately not been passed down. The wife of King Labarna I, however, was mentioned several times in the records, because she was alternately referred to as Sahassaras, Huwassanas and Tasimis. In Tyana there was also a centre of worship of the Hittite god Wurunkatti (Lord of the Land), who is also named with the Sumerian name Zababa. On the rock relief of İvriz from the late Hittite period (probably 8th century BC) a King Warpalawas of Tuwana is depicted with the god Tarhunzas.
Cappadocia initially became an independent kingdom
When Cappadocia finally lost its independence in 17 AD, it was converted into the Roman province of Cappadocia, to which Tyana belonged too. Under the rulership of Emperor Caracalla, the city in Cappadocia became a prime Roman colony. It joined the uprising of Zenobia and was retaken by Aurelian, who, however, treated the city mildly. In 371 it became the capital of the Cappadocia Secunda with the rulership of Valens.
In 372, Emperor Valens divided the province of Cappadocia in two pieces and Tyana became the capital of Cappadocia Secunda. During late antiquity, the city was also known as Christoupolis, the "City of Christ".
Islamic expansion and conquest
After that the city fell into disrepair as the Arab threat gradually subsided. The ruins of Tyana are located near what is now the Turkish city of Kemerhisar, where the remains of an ancient Roman aqueduct as well as cave tombs and burial grottoes can be found.
A large number of finds from Tyana and the nearby settlement mound Köşk Höyük can be viewed in the archaeological museum of Niğde, other finds in the museum of Ankara.
Church history relating to Tyana
The name still continues as a titular Catholic archbishopric.
Coordinates: 37 ° 49 ′ 24 ″ N, 34 ° 34 ′ 14 ″ E
Please read as well:
Nigde - the Hettite town of Nahita
The Stöckl - historical market place in Cheb-Eger